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2009-06-22 -
2009-06-26

The 10th European Congress of Stereology and Image Analysis (ECS10) at Milan, Italy



The aim of ECS10 is to bring together leading scientists working in the areas of (but not limited to)
* Stereology
* Geometrical and Topological tools: 2D and 3D shape factors, norms, metrics, gauges, discrete geometry
* Main mathematical and physical transforms: Fourier, Karhunen-Loëve, Walsh-Hadamard, Wavelets, Time-Frequency
* Stochastic geometry and related Statistical methods
* Spatial processes
* Pattern analysis
* Texture evaluation
* Image enhancement
* 3D reconstruction
* Colour images


More information:

http://ecs10.mat.unimi.it/


ecs10@mat.unimi.it


2009-05-25 -
2009-05-27

ICCS 2009 - International Conference on Computational Science at Baton Rouge, USA



The ICCS conference is the prime annual event in Computational Science. This interdisciplinary conference will draw academic and industry leaders from a variety of fields. The conference also will host computer and computational scientists who are designing and building the cyberinfrastructure necessary for next-generation computing. Discussions will focus on innovative ways to collaborate and how computational science is changing the future of research.

"ICCS 2009: Compute, Discover, Innovate" is hosted by the Center for Computation & Technology at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, U.S.A.

Thematic workshops organized by an expert in a particular area constitute the core of the conference.

More information:

http://www.iccs-meeting.org/iccs2009



2009-03-30 -
2009-04-01

Noise in Life 2009 at Cambridge, UK



Sponsored by SIGNET (the BBSRC funded Cell Signalling Network), the UK Mathematical Neuroscience Network and the European Science Foundation.

This is the first announcement for "Noise in Life 2009". Following 2 previous Noise in Life meetings in Spain (2006) and Germany (2007), "Noise in Life 2009" will focus on cell signaling, regulation of gene expression and neuronal dynamics. There is a nice balance between these three topics to make for an exciting meeting which will improve our understanding of the emergence of mesoscopic dynamics in cell physiology. We will combine communities from the biosciences, nonlinear dynamics, statistical physics, applied mathematics and scientific computing, and gather together expertise in realistic modeling, multi-scale simulations and experimental biology.

More information:

www.cellsignet.org.uk/noise09



2009-01-08 -
2009-01-12

Fourth Biennial Conference of the International Biogeography Society at Merida, Mexico



Invited symposia will feature talks on the biogeography of disease, patterns and processes in biotic interchanges, disjunct distributions in Asia and America, and the biogeography of species extinction. Attendees are invited to submit abstracts for oral and poster presentations. The conference will also include workshops, field excursions, and social events.

Registration, contact, and additional information may be found at: http://www.biogeography.org.

More information:

http://www.biogeography.org



2009-01-05 -
2009-01-09

Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing at Fairmont Orchid on the Big Island of Hawaii



You are cordially invited to submit papers or abstracts that will address multi-scale modeling activities that will encompass at least two physiological scales (from proteins, cells, tissues, organs, up to the whole-organism level). This year we will also have a specific focus on mechanistic (i.e. biophysics-based) patient-specific modeling crossing different scales. Patient-specific modeling from a biophysical base would not only provide predictions of specific therapies or surgical interventions, but also insight into the degree of success or failure. To rely on the predictive capabilities of these types of models, efficient methods and computational tools are of the utmost importance.

This session aims to foster the interactive environment for researchers working on different scales of biological problems, so that more collaborations and activities to bridge multi-scales will be initiated.

More on the session topics and submissions can be found at http://psb.stanford.edu/cfp-multiscale.html This special session is being co-organized by members of the NIH funded National Biomedical Computing Resource at the University of California San Diego and the NIH Center for Biomedical Computation at Stanford.

More information:

http://psb.stanford.edu/cfp-multiscale.html


roy@bioeng.ucsd.edu